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  3. Correcting mortality for loss to follow-up: a nomogram applied to antiretroviral treatment programmes in sub-Saharan Africa
 

Correcting mortality for loss to follow-up: a nomogram applied to antiretroviral treatment programmes in sub-Saharan Africa

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.7275
Publisher DOI
10.1371/journal.pmed.1000390
PubMed ID
21267057
Description
Background

The World Health Organization estimates that in sub-Saharan Africa about 4 million HIV-infected patients had started antiretroviral therapy (ART) by the end of 2008. Loss of patients to follow-up and care is an important problem for treatment programmes in this region. As mortality is high in these patients compared to patients remaining in care, ART programmes with high rates of loss to follow-up may substantially underestimate mortality of all patients starting ART.
Methods and Findings

We developed a nomogram to correct mortality estimates for loss to follow-up, based on the fact that mortality of all patients starting ART in a treatment programme is a weighted average of mortality among patients lost to follow-up and patients remaining in care. The nomogram gives a correction factor based on the percentage of patients lost to follow-up at a given point in time, and the estimated ratio of mortality between patients lost and not lost to follow-up. The mortality observed among patients retained in care is then multiplied by the correction factor to obtain an estimate of programme-level mortality that takes all deaths into account. A web calculator directly calculates the corrected, programme-level mortality with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). We applied the method to 11 ART programmes in sub-Saharan Africa. Patients retained in care had a mortality at 1 year of 1.4% to 12.0%; loss to follow-up ranged from 2.8% to 28.7%; and the correction factor from 1.2 to 8.0. The absolute difference between uncorrected and corrected mortality at 1 year ranged from 1.6% to 9.8%, and was above 5% in four programmes. The largest difference in mortality was in a programme with 28.7% of patients lost to follow-up at 1 year.
Conclusions

The amount of bias in mortality estimates can be large in ART programmes with substantial loss to follow-up. Programmes should routinely report mortality among patients retained in care and the proportion of patients lost. A simple nomogram can then be used to estimate mortality among all patients who started ART, for a range of plausible mortality rates among patients lost to follow-up.
Date of Publication
2011
Publication Type
Article
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Egger, Matthiasorcid-logo
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM)
Spycher, Benorcid-logo
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM)
Sidle, John
Weigel, Ralf
Geng, Elvin H
Fox, Matthew P
MacPhail, Patrick
van Cutsem, Gilles
Messou, Eugène
Wood, Robin
Nash, Denis
Pascoe, Margaret
Dickinson, Diana
Etard, Jean-François
McIntyre, James A
Brinkhof, Martin
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM)
IeDEA East Africa West Africa and Southern Africa
Additional Credits
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM)
Series
PLoS medicine
Publisher
Public Library of Science
ISSN
1549-1277
Access(Rights)
open.access
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